4.5 Article

Distribution and function of LMW glutenins, HMW glutenins, and gliadins in wheat doughs analyzed with 'in situ' detection and quantitative imaging techniques

Journal

JOURNAL OF CEREAL SCIENCE
Volume 93, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcs.2020.102931

Keywords

Fluorescent co-localization; Quantum dots; LMW glutenins; HMW glutenins; Gliadins; Mixing

Funding

  1. United States Department of Agriculture through a National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA)-Agriculture and Food Research Initiative (AFRI) grant [2017-67017-26472]
  2. Purdue Scholle Foundation
  3. Purdue Bilsland Fellowship

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The different gluten subunits, gliadins, LMW glutenins, and HMW glutenins have been reported to play different key roles in different type of wheat products. This paper studied the interaction between gliadin, LMW and HMW glutenins in soft, hard and durum semolina flour doughs during different stages of mixing. In order to see how do the gluten subunits (gliadin, LMW glutenin and HMW glutenin) redistribute during mixing, dough samples were taken at maximum strength and 10 min after maximum strength. The doughs have been mixed with the same level of added water (55%), therefore they all have different strengths values due to their changes in proteins content. Oscillatory rheological measurements were performed on the doughs. It has been found that HMW glutenins are relatively immobile because of their less molecular mobility and do no redistribute themselves especially at high strength for doughs such as hard wheat flour. LMW glutenins and gliadins on the other hand redistribute themselves at even at high dough strengths forming a more stable network. In weaker doughs such as soft wheat, the breakdown of the three proteins subunits is responsible for the decay in dough strength. We have also visualized how the greater amount of LMW glutenins in semolina is in constant interaction with HMW glutenins and gliadins allowing the dough to maintain a stable strength for an extended mixing time. Finally, we have found the 'in situ' detection and quantitative analysis techniques to be more sensitive to the changes occurring in the gluten network of the dough than the oscillatory rheological analysis.

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